House panel votes to split Air Force, create new U.S. Space Corps

By Jared Serbu | @jserbuWFED    June 29, 2017 1:51 pm   6 min read

As part of its version of the 2018 Defense authorization bill, the House Armed 
Services Committee voted late Wednesday night to create a sixth branch of the 
U.S. armed forces: the U.S. Space Corps, which would absorb the Air Force’s 
current space missions.

You could be forgiven if you haven’t been closely following the debate about 
creating the nation’s first new military service since 1947. Several members of 
the panel said they themselves were blindsided by the proposal, and staged an 
unsuccessful effort to block the change until it could be studied further — or 
at least until the full committee had held at least one hearing on the subject.

Rep. Michael Turner (R-Ohio) said he only learned about the proposal last week, 
when it first came before the subcommittee on strategic forces.

“I chastised my staff and said, ‘How could I not know that this was happening?’ 
They said, ‘Well, they had a meeting about it and you missed it,’” Turner said. 
“A meeting is certainly not enough. Maybe we do need a space corps, but I think 
this bears more than just discussions in a subcommittee. We have not had 
Secretary Mattis come before us and tell us what this means. We have not heard 
from the secretary of the Air Force. There’s a whole lot of work we need to do 
before we go as far as creating a new service branch.”

Rep. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.), a retired Air Force colonel, was similarly 
surprised by the Space Corps proposal. She said she had not been aware of it 
until it appeared in the bill the full committee debated on Wednesday.

“This is honestly the first time I’ve heard about a major reorganization to our 
Air Force,” she said Wednesday evening. “This is sort of a shocking way to hear 
about a very major reorganization to our military, and I think it deserves at 
least a couple hearings and discussions on the matter at the full committee 
level.”

But the measure, which would also establish a new U.S. Space Command and make 
the new chief of the Space Corps the eighth member of the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff, has the support of both Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas), the chairman of 
the full committee, and its ranking Democrat, Adam Smith (D-Wash.) The bill 
language was developed by Reps. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) and Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.), 
the top Republican and Democrat on the strategic forces subcommittee.

All of them argued Wednesday that the creation of a dedicated service for space 
had been studied for years, and that the idea’s time had come.

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https://federalnewsradio.com/defense-news/2017/06/house-panel-votes-to-split-air-force-create-new-u-s-space-corps/
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